Browsing articles tagged with " you"

Response to Paul (on PD must be better)

Nov 20, 2009   //   by Ben Wilkoff   //   Uncategorized  //  1 Comment

This post is in response to a comment on my last post which went something like this:

As I read your list I went back and forth agreeing with you.

Do you ever question if it is not how we do PD but the audience that we have hired and put into the “seats?”

Do you think we could stop “doing PD” if we simply hired a different caliber of professionals?

Do you worry that we have to “give(!!!) context, meaning and perspective” to teachers?

Here is my response:

I do think that it has to do with who we are talking to and what messages they will accept. However, I really do believe that if given enough reason to change, everyone will. I believe in the power of people to see something great and to become a part of it.

I also think that we could stop “doing PD” once people start thinking about networks as PD, but I still think we need to give people time away from their classroom responsibilities to actually create that network and to do their learning. We are passionate about learning what is “new”, but not everyone is. Others have to be given the time to do so, even if they are able to be a networked learner. They need to have the space to network.

All learners need to be given a space that has context, meaning and perspective. While I may create a lot of the context for what I do, I live it every day. I cannot expect people who do not blog to understand the context of blogging. I cannot expect people who do not use twitter to understand the context and meaning of a twitter conversation. And, I cannot expect people who do not use wikis and revision history to create a perspective to gain that perspective by doing anything other than actually using wikis and looking at revision histories.

When I say give, I believe that I am giving an experience. The experience is what matters to me. It is what will allow them to start creating context, meaning and perspective. Nothing else will do this and expecting them to create that experience on their own is just a little to harsh for me.

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SpeedGeek Learning Version .1

Nov 9, 2009   //   by Ben Wilkoff   //   Uncategorized  //  No Comments
I am pleased to announce the following features within the first prototype at http://speedgeeklearning.com:
I would love it if you would test out all of them and see what there is to see. I would also love any feedback that you can provide this prototype, either by simply e-mailing it to me or by leaving comments on the Planning site (if you don’t have access to that yet, let me know).

The other two things you can do to help the project at this point are as follows:
  1. Think of any way that you could use the SpeedGeek Learning platform within your own work. If there are any videos that you use and would like to collaborate upon, let’s set you up with an instance of your own. If there are certain big questions you would like to answer, let’s answer them with video and collaborative documents. Start to think about pushing the platform to be what you would like it to be. I am up any ideas you have. Just let me know.
  2. Spread the word that the prototype is available. I would love to get as many people answering these questions in the collaborative document and passing the link around as possible. If you feel the need to blog about it, do so. If you feel the urge to tweet, please do so. I pushed out the initial idea, but this is the first version that I can actually show off.
Thank you so much for your continued interest. I can’t wait to get to phase two, which will include:
  1. Recording your own videos within the interface.
  2. Analytics about individual video views
  3. Greater collaboration with the presenters of the sessions
  4. More ways to organize the sessions
  5. Further design work to flesh out the platform
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LiC Podcast: Design with Forever in Mind Archive

Jun 26, 2009   //   by Ben Wilkoff   //   Professional Development, Uncategorized  //  1 Comment

Although I was thrown a whole bunch by not having wifi for the first 45 minutes, I think that the session was worthwhile. Here is the archive of all that we have done. I am also including my planning podcast from my drive up to copper mountain.

Presentation:

Drop Box:

drop.io: simple private sharing

Important Links:

Ben Wilkoff Links:

  1. Learning is Change Blog and Podcast>
  2. Twitter Page
  3. Other Presentation on Thursday (The On Button: Instant and Always-on Collaboration)

Presentation Links:

  1. Foreverism
  2. Math Casts
  3. Web 2.0 Game Over

Exit Plan for Vocaroo:

  • Wav files backed up to a hard drive/server

Exit Plan for Drop.io:

  • Everyone who downloads the podcast will have a copy.

Exit Plan for JamGlue:

  • Mp3 files of mixes

Exit Plan for Screencastle:

  • Download Direct Link to File and store on hard drive/server

Exit Plan for Screentoaster:

  • Mov Downloads before uploading to screencastle site

Exit Plan for DimDim:

  • Download and build own DimDim server and store recordings there.

Exit Plan for Twitter:

Exit Plan for Google Docs:

Ustream Archive:




Twitter Archive:

  • CosmoCat: @bhwilkoff was great to learn about screencasting and audio recording! Hope you enjoy Audioboo! #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 09:46 PM GMT ·
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    bhwilkoff: Thanks to everyone for adding value to my session #tie09 #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 09:40 PM GMT ·
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    Jun 23, 2009 09:13 PM GMT ·
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    toniobarton: Learning needs real purpose and real audience. #cotie09 #tie09 #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 09:08 PM GMT ·
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    bhwilkoff: How do you capture learning? Add to the spreadsheet: http://tr.im/pvz2 #tie09 #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 09:05 PM GMT ·
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    Jun 23, 2009 08:40 PM GMT ·
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    CosmoCat: I’m searching for #forevertie09 live on TweetGrid Search – http://bit.ly/4A1lo3 (expand)

    Jun 23, 2009 08:19 PM GMT ·
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    care507: I’m searching for #forevertie09 live on TweetGrid Search – http://bit.ly/4A1lo3 (expand)

    Jun 23, 2009 08:13 PM GMT ·
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    forevertie09: I’m searching for forevertie09 live on TweetGrid Search – http://bit.ly/MVxM0 (expand)
    #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 08:13 PM GMT ·
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    forevertie09: #forevertie09 Devonee – Technology Integration Specialist from Mesa County

    Jun 23, 2009 08:12 PM GMT ·
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    forevertie09: I’m searching for #forevertie09 live on TweetGrid Search – http://bit.ly/4A1lo3 (expand)

    Jun 23, 2009 08:11 PM GMT ·
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    villagegreen: #forevertie09 to back channel: I’m Matthew Woolums, Integration Coordinator from DPS. My blog: http://villagegreen.edublogs.org

    Jun 23, 2009 08:08 PM GMT ·
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    matthewadennis: SpEd in middle school in NW Denver. #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 08:08 PM GMT ·
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    jcope50: #forevertie09 Hi! Jill – Skyline HS Teacher Librarian- St. Vrain – just moved to CO on Saturday from CA!!!

    Jun 23, 2009 08:08 PM GMT ·
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    toniobarton: #forevertie09 first year HS Computer Teacher from Manitou Springs High School

    Jun 23, 2009 08:08 PM GMT ·
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  • Sara24lynn: #forevertie09 Hello! I am a library media specialist in a K-5 school in Greeley, Colorado.

    Jun 23, 2009 08:08 PM GMT ·
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    lbreed: #forevertie09 Hi! Lisa from Evergreen Middle School! I am looking forward to learning about authentic assessments.

    Jun 23, 2009 08:08 PM GMT ·
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    matthewadennis: Name is Matthew (obvi). Work in DPS. #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 08:08 PM GMT ·
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    Sara24lynn: #forevertie09 Audioboo.fm is an audio tool for iPhone My audioboos http://audioboo.fm/profile

    Jun 23, 2009 08:07 PM GMT ·
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    matthewadennis: @forevertie09 mind being blown; didn’t realize so many tools out there that I didn’t know about. Not in the know at 25?? #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 08:03 PM GMT ·
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    bhwilkoff: How do you use audio to capture learning? Call 646-402-5701 x 25286 #tie09 #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 08:00 PM GMT ·
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    Jun 23, 2009 07:54 PM GMT ·
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    McTeach: I’m getting real-time search results at TweetGrid http://tweetgrid.com/ #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 07:54 PM GMT ·
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    Jun 23, 2009 07:51 PM GMT ·
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    toniobarton: #forevertie09 I like http://www.vocaroo.com/ recording website, easy to use.

    Jun 23, 2009 07:50 PM GMT ·
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    dlevesque: vocarro does not work on a eeepc #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 07:47 PM GMT ·
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    erhubbell: @bhwilkoff Hi everyone! Looking forward to great conversations today. #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 07:39 PM GMT ·
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    matthewadennis: Will the iPhone be forever, Ben? #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 07:31 PM GMT ·
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    McTeach: @bhwilkoff was giving it rave reviews! RT @courosa: @zemote I see Edmodo on the screen at #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 07:29 PM GMT ·
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    sroseman: #forevertie09 how do i get rid of the echo

    Jun 23, 2009 07:29 PM GMT ·
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  • zemote: @courosa awesome!!!! thanks for letting me know #forevertie09 , if anyone has questions, forward them on

    Jun 23, 2009 07:28 PM GMT ·
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    courosa: @zemote I see Edmodo on the screen at #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 07:27 PM GMT ·
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    courosa: #forevertie09 re: learning that lasts 4ever,think about boyd’s media attributes” persistence,replicability,searchability,invisible audience

    Jun 23, 2009 07:25 PM GMT ·
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    dlevesque: #forevertie09 why last forever?

    Jun 23, 2009 07:23 PM GMT ·
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    RickTanski: @bhwilkoff Hello from an office in Colorado Springs :-( #cotie09 #tie09 #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 07:22 PM GMT ·
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    McTeach: @bhwilkoff Hello from Sunny Northern California! #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 07:22 PM GMT ·
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    ericolsen: Will the computers ever work?#forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 07:20 PM GMT ·
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    courosa: #forevertie09 Hey Ben, hi from the St. Louis airport, soon to get back to Canada.

    Jun 23, 2009 07:20 PM GMT ·
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    villagegreen: Sitting in on design with forever in mind at tie #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 07:20 PM GMT ·
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    bhwilkoff: Say hello to all of the folks at #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 07:19 PM GMT ·
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    RickTanski: @bhwilkoff 3 hour session! I’m going to kill some bandwidth bits for sure. #cotie09 #tie09 #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 07:10 PM GMT ·
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    mjmontagne: tuning in to a bit of @bhwilkoff ‘s workshop #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 07:09 PM GMT ·
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    Jun 23, 2009 10:53 AM GMT ·
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    Jun 23, 2009 05:55 AM GMT ·
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    bhwilkoff: Creating a hashtag for my session tomorrow at #tie09. Come and Join in the session with #forevertie09
  • Jun 23, 2009 05:54 AM GMT ·
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    Conflict of interest

    Jun 20, 2009   //   by Ben Wilkoff   //   Uncategorized  //  2 Comments

    I accidentally posted this too soon, but here is the official version
    of this idea (which is bound to change at some point).
     
    What does it mean when you are faced with the following challenge:
     
    The place that you work has given you the freedom to explore different
    learning platforms, work with creative people, collaborate on process,
    policy, and pedagogy, and the means to not have to say no too often.
     
    The future you see for education is different than what is being planned.
     
    The opportunities to branch out and create your own learning spaces
    have never been more numerous or more engaging.
     
    The community you actively engage in advocates for open communication
    and documentation of every move forward that you make with your own
    learning.
     
    The boundaries on that communication have never been more clear: “Some
    meetings are secret.”
     
    The platforms for learning and support that you use are at odds with
    “having someone on the other end of the line” when something goes
    wrong.
     
    So, what here is a conflict of interest. Can all of this coexist and
    not create chaos, unrest or animosity between my job, my network, my
    living, and my passion?
     
    (Too vague? Give me a few months, and perhaps specifics will surface.)

    Posted via email from olco5′s posterous

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    Communal living

    May 10, 2009   //   by Ben Wilkoff   //   Uncategorized  //  1 Comment

    I never realized just how important community was to me until my wife
    and I asked our best family friends to come and live with us while
    they are saving up to buy a house.
     
    For many years I have written about online communities as being an
    essential part of authentic learning. Yet, I have never lived in such
    close quarters to another family, and thus did not know how much is
    learning by being a part of a close-knit real-life community.
     
    Daily I learn what actions by my children and theirs “really mean”. I
    now know why personal space has so much value. I know what to expect
    from our community and what my community expects of me.
     
    The reason for this post is that it has gotten me thinking about our
    need for a nurtured real-life community that supports everything we
    attempt to change in education. While I would like to think that the
    twittersphere is all that I need for support and community, I need the
    people that I can look straight in the eye and brainstorm the greatest
    learning activity with.
     
    I guess I will just state this idea as a challenge to myself: if I am
    not cultivating my real community as hard as I am doing so for my
    online community, I will never be able to accomplish all of the things
    I would like.
     
    Or, to put it another way:
     
    The number of people you can touch with your work depends upon how you
    work with the people you can literally touch. (Although, that sounds a
    little creepier than I wanted.)

    Posted via email from olco5′s posterous

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    I won’t buy anything that only does one thing

    May 3, 2009   //   by Ben Wilkoff   //   Uncategorized  //  1 Comment

    I have been thinking a lot about this recently: I don’t want anything to do with a device that only does what it was advertised to do. It is something that I have slowly realized as over he last few years as I went through the experience of using a Smart Board, CPS clicker system, an iPod touch and an Apple TV. The two former products are meant to do one thing well. They are advertised specifically for educational purposes, and they work. But the two latter products are meant to do anything that the community makes them do, and they are not specifically marketed as educational components.
     
    The latter products I keep on coming back to because they can do more and more as the community supports future development, and I guess that this is the difference between products I want to use and ones I don’t. The ones I care to use for education, are the ones with built in communities. They are the ones that get pushed to their full potential.
     
    So I guess what I am saying is that if I am ever put in change of large purchasing decisions for a district or school, I will be choosing to purchase and support products that connect together and have a community surrouning them.
     
    For example: I am right now using my iPod touch with an open source program called boxee (remote on the touch and the full program on the Apple TV) that is a full fledged media center in order to watch powerful TED talks in high definition on my TV using WiFi to stream the content. It is all connected.
     
    Shouldn’t it always be this way?
     
    (As an aside, I realize that this example is filled with apple products. I don’t believe that apple has a monopoly on connectedness or hackability, it happens that this is the community that I associate with most easily. I would actually love to hear about other devices that you keep on coming back to because they increase in value over time.)
     
    Sent from my iPod

    Posted via email from olco5′s posterous

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    Truth in advertising…

    Apr 19, 2009   //   by Ben Wilkoff   //   Uncategorized  //  1 Comment

    I have had quite a few people follow me on twitter recently that weren’t exactly people. They were organizations and schools. They were large groups of people that all somehow are tweeting with the same account. This, is a little unsettling to me and I’m not sure why.
     
    I guess it is partially because I believe it is a little less than genuine to have a single voice represent an entire entity. I also believe that many groups are joining twitter simply to advertise that they are on twitter. This is even less genuine.
     
    To me, an organization should encourage all of it’s members to become a part of a learning network. It should ask all of it’s employees to have heir own voices and then stream them all into a single place. The school should aggregate the conversation about learning in their space, not merely give updates as to the merits of their latest program changes.
     
    You raise the level or discourse about any topic by giving that discourse an official channel. By asking all participants in an organization to tweet on behalf of that organization, you can actually find the pulse of what is going on. Which is, after all, the major goal of Twitter.
     
    Sent from my iPod

    Posted via email from olco5′s posterous

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    The cost of not doing anything…

    Apr 18, 2009   //   by Ben Wilkoff   //   Uncategorized  //  1 Comment

    I was in a great meeting this week where we were considering whether
    or not to go ahead with a full scale implimentation of the Moodle LMS
    for assessment purposes in our district. It was a great meeting not
    because of the topic but the way it was being handled.
     
    We were talking about the absolute costs of an open source LMS and of
    staying with a custom-built assmessment solution. We were really
    looking for a venn diagram moment when one of the curriculum and
    instruction representatives said something really smart: “There is a
    cost to not doing anything as well. It may not be a dollar cost, but
    it will cost the teachers the ability to know more about their kids’
    knowledge and it will cost the kids some learning opportunities.”
    (Paraphrased by me.)
     
    Too often we do not think about the cost of doing nothing or of doing
    things too slowly. Does appathy in the face of huge choices cost our
    kids the best learning years of their lives?
     
    So, it got me thinking: What are the costs of doing nothing (or doing
    very little) to change school?
     
    Share an idea if this makes you think as much as it has made me.

    Posted via email from olco5′s posterous

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    New Responsibility

    Apr 12, 2009   //   by Ben Wilkoff   //   Uncategorized  //  1 Comment

    I was thinking about waiting until I got a little further into the
    project to start blogging about it, but since I made the choice to
    start blogging daily, I have really found that this forum let’s me
    think through all of the things that I need to.
     
    So the new responsibility is this: I have been put in charge of
    administrating multiple moodle installations in our district. The
    reason why this new charge I have been given is so strange to me is
    that up until 2 months ago, the only “official” moodle installation in
    our district was at a high school in parker, which I had little to do
    with.
     
     The reason for the shift is nothing short of an economic and
    pedagogical perfect storm. Our district had slowly been building the
    capacity for more and more teachers to start asking for a way of
    teaching and engaging with their students online, and with the failure
    of our bond election, the only choice for an LMS was to have someone
    who was already working in open source to implement and support a
    solution like moodle.
     
    The best part is, however, that no one I have talked to thinks that we
    are settling for something. From all of the initial conversations, all
    stakeholders believe that professional development, online learning,
    and blended learning fit well within a vision of moodle that includes
    outside assessments and google apps for communication.
     
    I guess the only reason for this post is to ask for advice. If you
    were asked to design and implement learning environments for an online
    school, a professional development program, and a blended model
    (online and in centers/schools) using moodle, what would you make sure
    to do (or not do)?
     
    While I have a definite vision for the way forward, I am not the
    smartest person in the room (considering that I have no idea how big
    this room is). I want to know more… Always more.

    Posted via email from olco5′s posterous

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    Twitter and Google Reader for Productivity

    Apr 10, 2009   //   by Ben Wilkoff   //   Uncategorized  //  No Comments

    (All quotations are not exact, but paraphrases of much better words that were in the mouths of the participants – These are notes, but I think that they might have benefit to others, so I am posting them on my blog as well)

    I just wanted to use this space in order to make sure that we take note of all of our discussion surrounding how to use twitter and google reader for productivity.

    “We don’t want to jump on the bandwagon with all new products. But, where does iGoogle, twitter, and blog feeds fit in our district’s overall vision.”

    “Just because things are free, doesn’t mean we should be using them and promoting it.”

    “Conceptually, the idea of everything coming to you is very inciting, but we need to look further at it from the Google Reader perspective and Twitter.”

    “The real question is where do we spend our time? What is really of value?”

    “Television news is too slow. I want to be able to know more about the things that I am interested in. I want it to be hyperlinked.”

    “I don’t have enough time to consume things in a serial manner. I don’t want to know what happened yesterday before I know what happened today.”

    “White papers are specific enough. I want relevancy and making sure that it is current.”

    1. Decide on your purpose for using feeds. What information would you like to be able to access that you can’t currently?
        • Topics to look at:
          • Stimulus and education
            • CDE does a good job of talking about the stimulus, but they don’t have a feed.
          • Broadband and education
          • Virtual Learning Environments
    2. Making your reading relevant: What are the topics that you would like to come to you?
      1. http://surfmind.com/lab/msn/opml/
      2. http://monitorthis.info/
      3. Google Reader Bundles
    3. How do you want information to come to you?

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